T.R.-B. v. DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILIES ( 2022 )


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  •        Third District Court of Appeal
    State of Florida
    Opinion filed January 26, 2022.
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    ________________
    No. 3D21-1716
    Lower Tribunal No. 17-15351
    ________________
    T.R.-B.,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    Department of Children and Families, et al.,
    Appellees.
    An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Vivianne del
    Rio, Judge.
    Jay & Campbell, PLLC, and Katie Jay (Stuart), for appellant.
    Karla Perkins, for appellee Department of Children and Families; Sara
    Elizabeth Goldfarb and Laura J. Lee (Tallahassee), for appellee Guardian
    ad Litem.
    Before FERNANDEZ, C.J., and HENDON, and BOKOR, JJ.
    FERNANDEZ, C.J.
    Appellant/petitioner below T.R-B. (“the petitioner”) appeals the trial
    court’s final order denying her amended motion to intervene as an interested
    party in her minor grandson’s underlying dependency proceeding. Because
    the trial court erred in denying the petitioner’s motion, we reverse the order
    on appeal and remand to the juvenile court for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion.
    The petitioner is the maternal grandmother and custodian of D.W., the
    minor child in the underlying dependency case. On May 26, 2017, Florida’s
    Department of Children and Families (“DCF”) sheltered D.W. Immediately,
    the petitioner sought custody of D.W. DCF initially objected to the trial court
    placing D.W. with the petitioner due to the thirty-year-old criminal conviction
    of petitioner’s husband, D.W.’s step-grandfather. Almost thirty years ago, the
    step-grandfather     was    convicted       of   grand   theft   and   cocaine
    distribution/possession and served ten years in jail.
    On October 22, 2018, D.W.’s mother’s parental rights were terminated,
    and D.W has no legal father. Thereafter, the petitioner obtained a home
    study. The home study was positive and indicated that the step-grandfather
    had lived the past twenty years as an “upstanding citizen.” The home study
    showed that the step-grandfather had a stable and respectable job for the
    last twenty years and was able to financially care for his children with his
    2
    wife, the petitioner; he was a role model to his children and society; and D.W.
    was very safe with him and was very well cared for and loved by the step-
    grandfather. Thus, the home study found that the step-grandfather’s criminal
    history should not be a deterrent for the adoption to proceed. The home
    study further indicated that D.W. is bonded to the petitioner, his step-
    grandfather, and petitioner’s family, namely: the petitioner’s mother (D.W.’s
    great grandmother), the petitioner and her husband’s biological daughter
    who lives with them and is approximately D.W.’s age (D.W.’s aunt), and the
    petitioner and her husband’s biological son who lives with them and is fifteen-
    year-old (D.W.’s uncle).
    In August 2017, the trial court overruled DCF’s objection and awarded
    custody of D.W. to the petitioner and the petitioner’s mother, C.G., who lives
    with the petitioner and her family. The trial court found it was in D.W.’s best
    interest to be placed in the custody of his grandmother (the petitioner). DCF
    or GALP have never sought to remove D.W. from the petitioner’s home.
    The petitioner then applied to adopt D.W. On August 27, 2020, DCF’s
    Adoption Applicant Review Committee (“AARC”) denied the petitioner’s
    application, mainly due to the petitioner’s husband’s criminal record. The
    AARC also cited an alleged lack of a bond between the petitioner and D.W.
    as another reason for denying the petitioner’s application. Instead, the AARC
    3
    approved the application submitted by D.M., a non-relative caregiver of
    D.W.’s infant biological sibling, A.W. D.W. has never resided with D.M. 1
    The petitioner claims that although DCF was aware that the petitioner
    wanted to adopt D.W., DCF failed to provide her with notice of hearings and
    meetings and/or ask for her input, as is required by section 39.4087, Florida
    Statute (2021). Accordingly, on September 21, 2020, the petitioner filed a
    formal complaint with the Family Resource Center listing the statutory
    violations.
    On December 28, 2020, the petitioner filed her petition in the family
    court division to adopt D.W. In her adoption petition, the petitioner requested
    that, pursuant to section 63.062(7), Florida Statute (2021), the trial court find
    that DCF was unreasonably withholding its consent to her adoption of D.W.
    On January 11, 2021, DCF asked the court for unsupervised weekly
    visitation between D.W. and A.W. to be supervised by D.M., the approved
    adoptive applicant, which the trial court granted on January 12, 2021. 2 The
    petitioner alleges neither she nor her counsel were notified. On January 20,
    2021, the petitioner filed her Amended Petition for Adoption by Relative. On
    1
    The petitioner filed an administrative appeal of the AARC’s decision, which
    has been stayed since the time the petitioner filed the adoption petition.
    2
    DCF later agreed to stay the visitation order until the petitioner’s motion to
    intervene could be heard by the court.
    4
    January 29, 2021, the petitioner filed her “Motion to Intervene as an
    Interested Party and to Stay 01/12/2021 Visitation Order.”
    On February 17, 2021, after the petitioner moved to have the family
    adoption case transferred to the juvenile division, the trial court in the family
    division transferred the adoption case to the Unified Children’s Court Division
    and ordered that a “juvenile adoption case” be created and assigned through
    the Office of the Clerk of the Courts, Juvenile Division.
    In March 2021, the petitioner moved to waive DCF’s consent to
    adoption. In preparation for the hearing before the trial court on this motion,
    in April 2021, the petitioner gave notice in the adoption proceeding to the
    GALP for the virtual depositions of the certified guardian ad litem and the
    GALP assistant circuit director. On April 29, 2021, the GALP filed an
    emergency motion to quash notice of taking deposition and motion for
    protective order and requested an emergency hearing. The GALP filed this
    motion in the dependency case, in which the GALP was a party but in which
    the petitioner was not. The GALP argued that the petitioner intended to
    depose the GALP’s employees in the adoption matter to which the GALP
    was not a party but to which the trial court retained exclusive jurisdiction. In
    addition, it argued only parties may take depositions, and the petitioner was
    not a party to the dependency action, only a participant.
    5
    On May 3, 2021, the petitioner filed her “Emergency Motion to Stay
    Hearing.” The trial court denied the stay. The next day, the trial court held
    the hearing on the GALP’s motion to quash the petitioner’s notice of
    deposition. The trial court acknowledged that on June 8, 2021, it would
    address the issue of whether DCF unreasonably withheld consent for the
    petitioner to adopt D.W., decided to give both parties more time to research
    the deposition issue, and thus rescheduled the hearing to May 18, 2021.
    Over the petitioner’s objection, the trial court directed her to file her response
    in the dependency action to the GALP motion to quash.
    Thereafter, at the May 18, 2021 hearing, the trial court found that
    adoption proceedings initiated under Chapter 39 are exempt from the
    jurisdiction of section 63.087, as that section dealt with the termination of
    parental rights pending adoption, which was not the case here. The court
    found that section 39.812(5) applied. The court stated it was aware a hearing
    was set for June 8, 2021 on the petitioner’s motion as to whether DCF
    unreasonably withheld its consent to the petitioner adopting D.W. The
    petitioner’s attorney corrected the trial court because the June 8 hearing
    was, instead, set as a hearing on the petitioner’s motion to intervene in the
    dependency proceeding.
    6
    The GALP reiterated that it requested the protective order because the
    petitioner was not a party to the dependency proceeding. The trial court
    asked DCF why it would grant the protective order if the petitioner’s motion
    on DCF unreasonably withholding its consent was going to be heard on June
    8, and the information the petitioner needed to prove her case would be
    obtained by taking the GALP’s deposition. The trial court noted that the
    deposition would assist the petitioner in her presentation of evidence to show
    that DCF unreasonably withheld its consent. DCF replied to the court that
    the petitioner was not a party to the dependency case and thus could not
    depose a party because she was merely a participant. In response, the
    petitioner’s attorney contended that although the petition for adoption was
    filed in the family court, it was transferred to the dependency court in
    February 2021. Thus, the petition was correctly in the juvenile division and
    correctly before this trial court.
    At the end of the hearing, the court found that the petitioner at that
    point in time was not a party. The court found that the petitioner could
    become a party on June 8 if the court found at that hearing that DCF
    unreasonably withheld its consent to adoption. Thus, the court granted the
    GALP’s motion for protective order because the petitioner was not a party
    who could conduct discovery. The court stated it was relying on section
    7
    39.812(5) because DCF’s consent was required once a TPR was entered.
    In addition, the trial court ruled that D.W. and his sibling, A.W., would have
    weekly visitation. That same day, the petitioner voluntarily dismissed her
    adoption petition because the trial court had ruled that the juvenile rules
    applied to adoption proceedings arising from dependency proceedings.
    Thus, the petitioner had no way to amend her petition because the juvenile
    rules did not provide for amendments.
    Thereafter, the petitioner filed her “Verified Petition for Adoption of
    Minor Child” on June 1, 2021, adding DCF and the GALP as parties. In the
    petition, the petitioner asked the court to find that DCF had abused its
    discretion by withholding its consent to the adoption of D.W. On June 3,
    2021, the petitioner filed her amended motion to intervene as an interested
    party and to stay the January 12, 2021 visitation order.
    On June 4, 2021, the GALP filed its “Motion to Review the
    Appropriateness of the Department’s Adoptive Selection and Memorandum
    of Law in Support of the Maternal Grandmother’s Motion to Waive the
    Department’s Consent.” The GALP now supported the petitioner’s adoption
    and stated it was in D.W.’s best interest that the petitioner adopt D.W. The
    GALP also stated it was in the best interest of the child that the court waive
    DCF’s consent, as it was being unreasonably withheld. It argued this was
    8
    because the AARC denial was largely based on the petitioner’s husband’s
    criminal history. The GALP contended that although his criminal history
    might have been a statutory disqualifier under section 39.0138(3), according
    to section 39.0138(8)(b), placement could be appropriate if the person
    showed they had been rehabilitated. The GALP contended that the step-
    grandfather’s offense was almost thirty years old, and since then, he served
    his time, met conditions of probation, started a family, maintained
    employment, and served as a positive role model in the lives of his children
    and was an upstanding member of society. In addition, the GALP asserted
    that D.W. had been in the petitioner and her husband’s home for the past
    three years, and nobody from DCF had expressed to the court or any person
    that the step-grandfather posed any danger to D.W., based on the step-
    grandfather’s criminal history. The GALP argued that DCF had not moved to
    modify the child’s placement and instead waited while D.W. remained with
    the petitioner, and the bond with cousins and caregivers was strengthened.
    The GALP argued that DCF’s withhold of consent penalized the family and
    D.W., whose best interest would not be served if he was not adopted by his
    grandmother, the only family he had known.
    On June 8, 2021, the trial court heard the petitioner’s amended motion
    to intervene. The petitioner argued that she had the ability to seek
    9
    intervention for status in the dependency case. The petitioner argued that
    pursuant to I.B. v Department of Children and Families, 
    876 So. 2d 581
    , 584
    (Fla. 5th DCA 2004), and Sullivan v. Sapp, 
    866 So. 2d 28
    , 33 (Fla. 2004),
    the legal test to seek party status is whether the interested person has an
    interest in the underlying subject matter of the case and whether that
    interested person is going to lose or gain, here, because of the ruling in the
    underlying dependency case. The petitioner stated that she met the I.B. test
    because I.B. made it clear that when there is a corresponding adoption
    petition that has been filed, the dependency court can allow an interested
    person to intervene. In addition, the petitioner argued that she had a
    fundamental liberty interest in maintaining her family, thus she should be
    permitted to intervene.
    The court denied the motion, finding that the petitioner was a
    participant but did not grant the petitioner party status in the dependency
    case. The court later entered its order on July 21, 2021 denying the
    petitioner’s amended motion to intervene. In addition, the court did not hold
    a hearing on the petitioner’s motion on whether DCF’s consent was
    unreasonably withheld because the petitioner withdrew the motion. The
    petitioner has now appealed the denial of her motion to intervene.
    10
    The petitioner contends, in part, that the trial court erred in concluding
    she may not intervene in D.W.’s dependency proceeding. 3 We agree with
    the petitioner.
    An appellate court reviews an order on a motion to intervene under an
    abuse of discretion standard. Merrick Park, LLC v. Garcia, 
    299 So. 3d 1096
    ,
    1103 (Fla. 3d DCA 2019). In Florida, adoptions after a termination of parental
    rights proceed under Chapter 63, Florida’s adoption statute, and section
    39.812, Florida Statutes (2021), relating to adoptions after parental rights
    have been terminated. Section 63.037, Florida Statutes (2021), exempts
    these adoptions after the parental rights of each parent have been
    terminated from certain provisions in chapter 63, but not all. In addition,
    section 39.812 gives the dependency court continuing jurisdiction over the
    minor child until the child is adopted. § 39.812(4), Fla. Stat. (2021). “The
    petition for adoption must be filed in the division of the circuit court which
    3
    The petitioner’s remaining points on appeal are meritless. First, with respect
    to the petitioner’s point referencing the May 18, 2021 trial court order that
    granted the GALP’s motion for protective order, DCF and GALP are correct
    that this order is not within the scope of this Court’s review, as this Court’s
    review is limited to the order on appeal, which is the trial court’s final order
    denying petitioner’s amended motion to intervene. Second, the petitioner
    contends that the trial court erred in consolidating the adoption case with the
    dependency case. However, there is no order in the record consolidating the
    adoption proceeding with the dependency proceeding. The adoption
    proceeding was correctly transferred to the dependency court, as the
    petitioner requested, thus there is no merit to this point on appeal.
    11
    entered the judgment terminating parental rights, . . . .” § 39.812(5), Fla. Stat.
    (2021). A copy of the supporting home study and a “copy of the consent
    executed by the department must be attached to the petition, unless waived
    pursuant to section 63.062(7).” See also § 39.812(5). The court shall waive
    DCF’s consent “upon a determination by the court that such consent is being
    unreasonably withheld and if the petitioner has filed with the court a favorable
    preliminary adoptive home study.” § 63.062(7), Fla. Stat. (2021).
    Rule 8.535(d) of the Florida Rules of Juvenile Procedure, although not
    giving much guidance to the court on how to conduct a withhold of consent
    hearing, provides the following:
    (d) Withholding Consent to Adopt.
    (1) When a petition for adoption and a favorable home study
    under section 39.812(5), Florida Statutes, have been filed and
    the department's consent has not been filed, the court shall
    conduct a hearing to determine if the department has
    unreasonably withheld consent.
    (2) In reviewing whether the department unreasonably withheld
    its consent to adopt, the court shall determine whether the
    department abused its discretion by withholding consent to the
    adoption by the petitioner. In making this determination, the court
    shall consider all relevant information, including information
    obtained or otherwise used by the department in selecting the
    adoptive family, pursuant to Florida Administrative Code Chapter
    65C.
    (3) If the court determines that the department unreasonably
    withheld consent to adopt, and the petitioner has filed with the
    court a favorable home study as required by law, the court shall
    12
    incorporate its findings into a written order with specific findings
    of fact as to how the department abused its discretion in
    withholding its consent to adopt, and the consent of the
    department shall be waived.
    Under Rule 8.535(d), the petitioner in the case before this Court was required
    to file a petition for adoption and a favorable home study to obtain a hearing
    on DCF’s withhold of her consent to adopt D.W. She complied with these
    requirements. Although she filed the petition for adoption in the circuit court
    family division, on February 17, 2021, the petitioner’s adoption case was
    transferred to the juvenile division where the dependency action was being
    heard and was assigned to the same judge hearing the dependency action.
    Thus, all statutory requirements were met for the petitioner to have the
    consent issue addressed by the trial court.
    The petitioner contends that to prepare for the hearing before the trial
    court on the petitioner’s motion to determine if DCF unreasonably withheld
    its consent to her adopting D.W., the petitioner wanted to depose two GALP
    employees. The GALP moved for a protective order contending that the
    petitioner was not a party to the dependency proceeding. The trial court
    agreed and granted the GALP’s motion. The petitioner then filed her motion
    to intervene in the dependency proceeding to be able to depose the GALP
    employees, but the trial court denied this motion.
    13
    DCF and GALP argue that the trial court had no legal authority to grant
    the petitioner’s motion to intervene, thus it did not err in denying the motion.
    However, as the petitioner contends, Florida law indicates otherwise.
    First, the Florida Rules of Juvenile Procedure provide that a party “shall
    include the petitioner, the child, the parent(s) of the child, the department,
    and the guardian ad litem . . . when the program has been appointed.” Fla.
    R. Juv. P. 8.210(a); see also § 39.01(58), Fla. Stat. (2021). Participants are
    defined as “any person who is not a party but who should receive notice of
    hearings involving the child.” Fla. R. Juv. P. 8.210(b); see also § 39.01(57),
    Fla. Stat. (2021) (participants in a shelter proceeding, dependency
    proceeding, or termination of parental rights proceeding include foster
    parents, the child’s legal custodian, identified prospective parents, actual
    custodians of the child, “and any other person whose participation may be in
    the best interest of the child.”).
    Further, Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.230 provides that “[a]nyone
    claiming an interest in pending litigation may at any time be permitted to
    assert a right by intervention, . . . .” In general, the intervention rule should
    be liberally construed. Grimes v. Walton Ct., 
    591 So. 2d 1091
    , 1093-94 (Fla.
    1st DCA 1992). Intervention is a matter of the trial court’s discretion. De
    Sousa v. JP Morgan Chase, N.A., 
    170 So. 3d 928
    , 929 (Fla. 4th DCA 2015).
    14
    The petitioner contends that pursuant to I.B. v Department of Children
    and Families, 
    876 So. 2d 581
    , 584 (Fla. 5th DCA 2004) and Sullivan v. Sapp,
    
    866 So. 2d 28
    , 33 (Fla. 2004), the legal test in order to seek party status is
    that it “ ‘must be in the matter in litigation, and of such a direct and immediate
    character that the intervenor will either gain or lose by the direct legal
    operation and effect of the judgment.’ ” I.B., 
    876 So. 2d at 584
     (quoting
    Sullivan, 
    866 So. 2d at 33
    ). The petitioner here meets that test.
    In I.B., DCF sought to declare the minor child dependent after he and
    his mother tested positive for cocaine. Id. at 582. The child was placed with
    the appellants/foster parents, who were planning to adopt the child. DCF also
    contacted the mother’s cousin who lived in Tennessee and was also
    interested in adopting the child. Id. DCF requested that Tennessee conduct
    a home study on the mother’s cousin. Id. The guardian submitted a positive
    report on the foster parents. Id. Thereafter, the trial court entered an order
    terminating parental rights to the child and ordered DCF to proceed with the
    goal of adoption. Id.
    DCF then moved to change placement from the foster parents to the
    Tennessee relatives. Id. at 583. A few days later, the foster parents filed their
    petition to adopt the child. The foster parents did not have DCF’s consent for
    this adoption. Id. After a hearing, the trial court denied DCF’s motion for a
    15
    change of placement, noting the child had had only one contact with the
    Tennessee relatives. The trial court ordered DCF to provide visitation for the
    relatives and the child. Id. Afterwards, DCF filed its case plan update and
    noted that the adoption applications from both the foster parents and the
    relatives had been submitted to its adoption review committee and a decision
    was pending. DCF’s adoption review committee then selected the
    Tennessee relatives as the adoptive parents. Id.
    The foster parents moved to intervene in the dependency action. Id.
    At the hearing on the foster parents’ motion, the trial court denied the
    intervention. Id. The trial court ruled that the decision to select the suitable
    adoptive parents was one for DCF, not for the trial court, and that the foster
    parents lacked standing to challenge DCF’s decision. Id. at 584. The trial
    court did not take any evidence at this hearing, did not hear from the foster
    parents or the guardian, and did not consider the child's best interests in
    removing him from his home with the foster parents where he had lived for
    sixteen months. Id. at 583-84. On appeal, the Fifth District Court of Appeal
    reversed. The Court stated:
    As a threshold matter, we conclude the foster parents clearly
    have standing to intervene in these proceedings.FN1. The nature
    of the interest that entitles a party to intervene “must be in the
    matter in litigation, and of such a direct and immediate character
    that the intervenor will either gain or lose by the direct legal
    16
    operation and effect of the judgment.” Sullivan v. Sapp, 
    866 So. 2d 28
    , 33 (Fla.2004).
    Here “the matter in litigation” was the placement for adoption of
    the foster parents' child, the child they wanted to adopt and had
    cared for the past sixteen months. The foster parents would
    directly gain or lose by the court's rulings. Thus, the foster
    parents have sufficient interest to warrant intervention in the
    litigation. See In the Interest of Z.J.S., 
    787 So.2d 875
     (Fla. 2d
    DCA 2001); In the Interest of C.G., 
    612 So.2d 602
     (Fla. 4th DCA
    1992).
    Even if the foster parents were not properly intervenors in these
    proceedings, they were already “participants” under Florida Rule
    of Juvenile Procedure 8.210(b) since they were the child's foster
    parents. Under this rule, participants may be granted leave by
    the court to be heard without the necessity of filing a motion to
    intervene. See N.S. v. Department of Children and Families, 
    857 So.2d 1000
     (Fla. 5th DCA 2003).
    Id. at 584-85 (footnote 1 cited to Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.230).
    Thus, I.B. makes it clear that under the facts of petitioner’s case, when there
    is a corresponding adoption petition that has been filed, the dependency
    court can allow the adoption petitioner to intervene because she has a clear
    interest in the underlying subject matter of the dependency case.
    Further, the petitioner also has a “sufficient interest to warrant
    intervention in the litigation.” I.B., 
    876 So. 2d at 584
    . The petitioner is the
    maternal grandmother of D.W., has had custody of D.W. for four years, thus
    he has lived with them over half of his life. In addition, there is an ongoing
    adoption petition, and the parental rights of the minor child have been
    17
    terminated, just as in I.B. The “matter in litigation” in the case before us is
    the placement for adoption of D.W., who is the child the petitioner wants to
    adopt and has cared for the past four years. The petitioner will directly gain
    or lose by the trial court’s denial of her motion to intervene. Thus, the trial
    court in the dependency proceeding had jurisdiction to grant the motion to
    intervene so the petitioner could present her case on DCF’s unreasonable
    withhold of consent and participate in a meaningful way. See also Berenyi v.
    Department of Children and Families, 
    257 So. 3d 1182
     (Fla. 3d DCA 2018)
    (noncustodial grandparents who filed petition to adopt their minor grandson
    were granted intervenor status in dependency action, as well as in the foster
    parents’ adoption action, after grandparents filed motion to intervene in the
    dependency case; this Court found that “the Grandparents were ‘legally
    interested parties’ entitled to notice and an opportunity to be heard regarding
    the [foster parents’] petition to adopt the Child.”; this Court further found that
    the grandparents had “established their interest in adopting the Child,
    including their submission of a home study attached to their own verified
    petition to adopt the Child.”); B.B. v. Department of Children and Families,
    
    854 So. 2d 822
     (Fla. 1st DCA 2003) (paternal grandmother of minor twins
    granted custody of the twins and the minor children lived with the
    grandmother for three months; the parental rights of the twins’ parents were
    18
    terminated, and court ordered that a cousin of the twins be considered as
    suitable to adopt the twins, and if she could not, then DCF was to give the
    grandmother the chance to adopt the minor children; thereafter, the cousin
    was unable to adopt the twins. DCF did not take action to allow the
    grandmother to obtain custody of the twins, so appellant filed a motion to
    intervene in the dependency proceeding, which was denied as premature by
    the trial court. The grandmother then filed an adoption petition, which was
    also denied by the trial court, stating it lacked jurisdiction, DCF had identified
    another adoptive home for the twins; and DCF had not consented to
    appellant’s adoption of the twins. The appellate court held that “[t]he
    dependency court never loses jurisdiction after a TPR trial, and continues to
    retain exclusive jurisdiction throughout the adoption process…”; the court
    further stated that a circuit court has “ ‘inherent and continuing jurisdiction to
    entertain matters pertaining to child custody and to enter any order
    appropriate to a child's welfare.’ ” Thus, the court held that at the hearings
    on both the motion to intervene and petition for adoption, the trial court had
    jurisdiction to allow appellant to “participate in a meaningful way in
    proceedings involving the ultimate placement of her grandchildren.” The
    appellate court reversed and remanded the case, instructing the court that
    the grandmother be allowed to adopt if certain safety conditions were met.);
    19
    Hausmann ex rel. Doe v. L.M., 
    806 So. 2d 511
     (Fla. 4th DCA 2001)
    (grandparents would be allowed to intervene in adoption proceedings of their
    daughter's minor child, where the grandparents filed their own adoption
    petition before that of the prospective adoptive parents, the grandparents
    had custody of the child for a period of time (less than six months), and the
    grandparents challenged whether consents given by the child's parents were
    invalid because of abandonment).
    In opposition, DCF cites to J.L. v. G.M., 
    687 So. 2d 977
     (Fla. 4th DCA
    1997). In J.L., the maternal grandmother and maternal aunt and uncle were
    not allowed to intervene in the dependency proceeding. 
    Id. at 977
    . The case
    does not provide facts on whether the maternal grandmother and maternal
    aunt and uncle had filed a petition for adoption. The appellate court found
    that granting party status to those relatives was “contrary to Florida's strong
    public policy against unwarranted interference with the parenting decisions
    of an intact family unit.” 
    Id. at 978
    . Thus, it appears the child in that case was
    not living with the relatives who had moved to intervene, the relatives were
    not the custodians of the minor child, and the minor child’s parents’ parental
    rights had not yet been terminated. 
    Id.
     These are critical facts distinguishable
    from facts in the case now before this Court.
    20
    DCF also cites In Interest of J.S., 
    404 So. 2d 1144
     (Fla. 5th DCA 1981),
    for the proposition that Chapter 39 does not provide the authority to allow a
    grandparent to enter an ongoing dependency action solely in their capacity
    as a grandparent. 
    Id. at 1146
    . In that case, the grandparent was not the
    custodian of the minor child. In addition, the child’s mother in that case still
    had her parental rights; there had been no TPR. 
    Id.
     Thus, we find In Interest
    of J.S. to be inapplicable here.
    It is true that the initial placement of D.W. with the petitioner was initially
    over the objection of DCF and GALP. However, for four years, DCF did
    nothing and left D.W. in the petitioner’s home with the step-grandfather.
    Thus, the bonds between D.W. and his grandparents grew stronger over the
    four years, over half D.W.’s life, as the petitioner points out. The GALP
    currently supports the petitioner adopting D.W. and agrees with her that
    DCF’s consent was unreasonable withheld.
    The petitioner contends the child’s best interest is of foremost concern
    in adoption proceedings. She further argues the trial court’s best interest
    determination will be hindered if she is not meaningfully heard on the matter.
    The petitioner’s point is well-taken as she will not have the ability to
    adequately advocate her position on whether DCF unreasonably withheld its
    consent if she is not a party in the dependency proceeding and cannot
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    conduct discovery to gather information to support her case. Being a
    participant alone does not give her that ability. There is a need here for
    intervention because the petitioner argues the AARC lacks transparency and
    due process.
    In construing sections 39.812(5) and 63.082(7), courts must avoid
    construing a statute in a manner that would achieve an unreasonable result.
    See In Interest of J.A., 
    561 So. 2d 356
    , 358 (Fla. 3d DCA 1990) (construing
    Chapter 39 to “ ‘avoid any construction that would produce an unreasonable
    … consequence.’ ”); Holly v. Auld, 
    450 So. 2d 217
    , 219 (Fla. 1984) (“[A] literal
    interpretation of the language of a statute need not be given when to do so
    would lead to an unreasonable or ridiculous conclusion.”). Here, to accept
    DCF and the GALP’s argument on appeal would lead to an unreasonable
    result because it would mean that the petitioner is not able to present
    evidence to the trial court to support her motion that the court find that DCF
    unreasonably withheld its request for her to adopt D.W. Without the ability to
    depose GALP employees, the petitioner would not have the evidence she
    needs to support her arguments.
    As D.W.’s custodial caregiver for over the last four years, as the child’s
    maternal grandmother, and as the petitioner in the adoption petition, the
    petitioner has shown that she has a direct and immediate interest and will
    22
    either gain or lose by the dependency court orders. Thus, the trial court
    abused its discretion in not granting the petitioner’s amended motion to
    intervene. We reverse the order denying the petitioner’s amended motion to
    intervene and remand to the trial court with instructions to grant the
    petitioner’s motion to intervene, giving the petitioner party status in the
    dependency proceeding for the purposes previously articulated herein.
    Reversed and remanded with instructions.
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